"z., 1 , a 8A - Monday, February 11, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com N w The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Muslim makes Israeli football debut Campus researches gun solutions Demonstrations by violent fans leading up to appearance JERUSALEM (AP) - Under heavy security, a Muslim foot- ball player whose signing with a Jerusalem club sparked a violent uprising by a hardcore group of racist fans made his much anticipated debut Sunday to a rousing ovation. Hundreds of police deployed around Beitar Jerusalem's sta- dium, two days after a suspi- cious fire believed to be set by angry fans destroyed the team's. main offices. Tensions remained high as the team faced off against Bnei Sakhnin, an Arab team whose fans have clashed before with Beitar's. But the thousands of fans and foes who flooded to Teddy Stadium presented a show of strength against a ris- ing tide of racism among Israeli soccer fans. "I came today to show that not all Beitar fans are punks and racists," said Yair Sina, a 49-year-old lifelong Beitar fan. "I won't let them take away my love for the team," The fire, which destroyed historic trophies and memen- tos, marked the height of a violent campaign by fans upset with the team for signing two Muslim players from Chechnya. But in contrast to the previ- ous taunts and jeers directed at the players, the crowd of thou- sands erupted into a rousing standing ovation when Gabriel Kadiev, a 19-year-old defender recently brought over from FC Terek Grozny, entered the game in the 80th minute. Every time he touched the ball the crowd cheered wildly, mostly.drown- ing out a smattering of boos. The trend continued when a few minutes later Beiter scored a late goal to secure a 2-2 tie. Kadiev's Chechen teammate, 23-year-old Zaur Sadayev, was injured and not included in the team lineup. The goodwill was felt throughout the stadium with banners reading "Violence and racism? Not on our field" and fliers explaining the sensitivity of the game and beseeching the fans to behave. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said more than 500 policemen were deployed inside and outside the stadium to prevent disturbances. Officers were on horseback and others escorted the Sakhnin players into the field to make sure they were safe. "It is now clear to any rea- sonable person in the country where racism can lead. I came here to strengthen Beitar in their battle against racism," said Jerusalem Mayor Nir Bar- kat, one of several dignitaries at the game. "This is a historic process and it is clear that what was once cannot be again." Beitar has long tried to con- tain a tightly knit fan group called "La Familia" whose behavior has had the team docked points and forced it to play before empty stadiums. The group is routinely abusive toward opposing players, taunt- ing them with racist and anti- Arab chants. Mass. college inspires renewed focus on firearms BOSTON (AP) - On a Friday afternoon in December, Lee Pel- ton was driving home with his 13-year-old daughter in the pas- senger seat when radio reports of the Newtown school massa- cre forced him over to side of the road. "I held her hand as we listened ...and we both cried,"said Pelton, the president of Boston's Emer- son College. "We're both strug- gling with how could this have happened, why it happened? Those are the things we talked about. We didn't have answers. But I knew at that moment I was going to do something." Overnight, the answer of just what to do began to crystallize. The next day, Pelton sent a long email to all of the college's 4,500 students and 1,500 faculty and staff. Together they would "seek to make sense of the senseless," he wrote, by launching a prob- ing discussion of gun violence in which all sides would listen to one another and search for solutions. The unresolved ques- tion: Given the fierce divide and raw emotions that surround the debate over guns, is that kind of conversation even possible? Pelton decided it wasn't enough to search for the answer at his college alone. He wrote an open letter to President Barack Obama and more than 280 other university and college presidents signed on, pledging to launch debate about the issues sur- rounding guns ontheir own cam- puses. That discussion in higher edu- cation had already begun, and has only grown. Pelton's letter went out about the same time as another, penned by the president of Atlanta's Oglethorpe University and signed by leaders of morethan 370 colleges. That letter urges lawmakers to oppose legislation allowing guns on campuses, close a loophole allowing some gun sales withouta background check, reinstate a ban on military-style weapons and require safety stan- dards for guns. Institutions including Bethany College in West Virginia, whose president signed both letters, and BrownUniversityin Rhode Island, whichis actingonitsown, saythey are planning forums on gun vio- lence later this semester. Ogletho- rpe President Lawrence Schall said he plans to deliver a speech on his campus this month about the need for college presidents to speak out on important issues, highlighted by the focus on com- batting gun violence. Pelton, who acknowledges his own strong views on gun control, says he expectedaskepticism. Many American colleges and universities are regarded; par- ticularly by conservative critics, as centers of left-leaning views. And students and professors at Emerson, facing Boston Com- mon and just down the hill from the gold dome of Massachusetts' capitol, routinely describe it as a decidedly liberal institution. It sits in a strongly left-leaning city, in the state that gave the nation the Kennedys, was the only one of 50 whose voters backed George McGovern's quixotic 1972 run for president, and already is home to some of the nation's strictest gun laws. I I S 0 Hosptial releases victims of Mardi Gras shooting 6 I Reveling continues after bullets wounded four Friday NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Gunshots erupted in a crowd of bead-wearing, drink-carrying late-night revelers on Bourbon Street during the countdown to Mardi Gras, wounding four people and sending bystanders running and screaming. Hours later on Sunday, though, the same stretch was packed with partiers who said they weren't letting the violence dampen their fun. In a video taken by a witness Saturday night and released the next day, the shootings are preceded by footage of people standing shoulder to shoulder in New Orleans' famed tour- ist district, with some holding green plastic cups and wear- ing gaudy hats or masks. A sec- tion of the frame highlighted by police shows people jos- tling and speaking with angry expressions. Police said in an email that the video depicts an argument involving one of the shoot- ing victims and the suspects. Two men are seen leaving the argument and returning with a third, then approaching the victim as at least one of the sus- pects begins shooting, accord- ing to police. Four shots are heard in rapid succession, fol- lowedby screams as some in the crowd stagger into one another and a nearby wall. A man whom police identified as one of the suspects is shown walking through the crowd with his arm extended as the gunshots are heard, though it's difficult to make outa weapon. Police said Sunday that they were seeking the three men and that they've identified one suspect, but won't release the name. The shootings wounded two men and two women, three of whom were treated and released Sunday. One man hit in the abdomen, thigh and pelvis was in stable condition Sunday after surgery the previ- ous night, New Orleans Police spokesman Hilal Williams said. Another man was shot in the buttocks, one woman was shot on the chin and right foot, and the second woman was shot on the toe, police said. No ages or names were released. The shooting came on the- last weekend of partying before Mardi Gras, the Fat Tuesday celebration that is the signature tourist event of the year in New Orleans. And for thousands, the partying continued despite the shooting. Parades rolled under cloudy skies Sunday before crowds of onlookers, though the shootings were on the minds of some revelers. "It was very disappoint- ing," said New Orleans resi- dent Carol Redmann-Bailey as she watched Thoth roll by. "I was disappointed and sad, but it seems like Bourbon Street stayed open. ... Let the good times roll." New Orleans has been plagued for years by violent crime, including gun violence that has soared since Hurricane Katrina devastated the city in 2005. In 2011, sixteen people were shot and at least two killed in Halloween shootings in New Orleans. One of the victims was slain near the Chris Owens nightclub, about a block away from Saturday's incident. Patrick Clay, a 21-year-old Louisiana State University stu- dent, told The Times-Picayune that he was standing on the cor- ner of Bourbon Street on Satur- day night when suddenly he saw a crowd running and people screaming that there had been a shooting. close to north campus. on bus line. free heat. free parking for you and guests. 3 athletic courts. free tanning.